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Brush painting clear acrylic problem


Walter

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Hello everyone, new to this forum. I have a question that I hope some of you can help me with. I am using Mr Hobby color acrylic paints and am having difficulty brushing on Mr Hobby clear acrylic as a final coat.  What is happening is when I brush on the clear I notice it reacting to my paints almost immediately. It's frustrating because it ruins my paint work. If I apply a little too much the colour actually starts to run. 

 

I've tried diluting the clear with water but I think that makes it worse. The best technique so far is to brush once  and quickly other than this method  I'm at a loss. TIA

 

 

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Hello and welcome.

I've never used these specific paints but just to help other respondents, how much drying / curing time have you been allowing for the base coat before you add the clear coat?

 

Also when you answer that question can I suggest you repost this in the specific paint problems forum, which is here?

https://www.britmodeller.com/forums/index.php?/forum/16-paint/

Edited by Work In Progress
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It should, and always has for me but then I've never used this specific brand. Is this a water-based odourless polymer type of acrylic, or a solvent based type of acrylic similar to Tamiya? And what are you thinning it with?

 

A polymer type water-based acrylic is an irreversible reaction when it goes off, and the chemistry does not permit another layer of water to soften the previous layer. - unlike solvent=based paints such as oil paints or cellulose paints. So I suspect there is another solvent in play here somehow.

 

Examples of the water-based acrylics with which I've never had the slightest such problem - Xtracrylics, Revell Aqua, PollyScale, Aeromaster Warbird Colours, Games Workshop's Citadel range.

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It is the same as Tamiya acrylic, so without additions like retarders, the fresh coat can easily reactivate and pull up the previous coat when brush painting. 

 

I would advise either going through the rigmarole of using an acrylic paint retarder, using a different acrylic paint (model master, revell, humbrol, etc) or enamels when brushing.

Edited by sapperastro
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